The total cost of the war—some 350 billion dollars—is a number so large that it is emotionally meaningless to me, but I spent a good deal of time contemplating the speed at which the war’s tally increased by tens, hundreds, and thousands of dollars—amounts of money to which I can relate.

The counter moved too fast for me to get a good measure of the rate of war spending using the sweep hand on my wristwatch, so I used a more elementary and less scientific method, and here’s what I discovered: the United States’ taxpayers spend twenty thousand dollars on the war every time I take a breath.

Meanwhile, my daughter attends kindergarten at a public school in East San José, where most of the students are English language learners, and many are being raised in poverty. The school’s principal is having to decide between installing night-time security lights for the students’ safety and starting a library for the students’ education.

That’s a tough decision, but my daughter’s school is not unique, in fact, as inner city schools go, it is relatively well supplied. The school is staffed by excellent and dedicated teachers and the parents share a remarkable commitment to the education of their children.

In every major American city, public schools suffer from a lack of funding, and schools in rural districts don’t fare much better, yet the cost of funding excellent public education for America’s children living outside the privileged suburbs is a lot less expensive than is fighting a war.

I know enough about government budgets to know that money for wars comes out of federal coffers, while education is funded by states. Furthermore, the fact that we are spending an alarming amount of money in Iraq doesn’t necessarily mean we have the money. The same American children whose schools are seriously under-funded will someday be given responsibility for the tremendous debt that daily is being incurred by the war in Iraq.

It is, nonetheless, helpful to compare the cost of the war in Iraq and the lack of funding for public education in America. It says something about who we are as a society that we’re willing to spend an unimaginable amount of money we don’t have to fight a war we didn’t need to wage, all the while feigning helplessness and claiming fiscal impotence when faced with the relatively small challenge of funding public education.

I’m not an expert on matters of war and peace. I have lots of opinions on the subject, but I really don’t know when or how to bring our troops home from Iraq. I do know that this is the holiday season, and the Christmas present I’d like is for our nation’s leaders to stop the war for a breath or two, and send the dividend of that respiration to East San Jose. I know some students who could use a library.

4 thoughts on “The Cost of War, One Breath at a Time.”

The cost of war — in money and in lives — is devastating and the scope of the war crime — initiating this war based on lies — is immense. Our Congressional representatives must stop funding the war. The power of the purse is the only power they have to stop the bleeding from the budget and from the thousands who will continue to die until the war ends. They must vote NO to the next bundle of money that the Pentagon requests.

I’m curious: exactly how old is the school your daughter attends — i.e., how long has it been in operation? I find it extraordinary that any school that has been in operation any length of time would not have a library. The question to be asked of the school, and of the district administration is, why has there never been a library?